Abstract

BackgroundThe availability of handheld, noninvasive sublingual video-microscopes allows for visualization of the microcirculation in critically ill patients. Recent studies demonstrate that reduced numbers of blood-perfused microvessels and increased penetration of erythrocytes into the endothelial glycocalyx are essential components of microvascular dysfunction. The aim of this study was to identify novel microvascular variables to determine the level of microvascular dysfunction in sepsis and its relationship with clinical variables.MethodsThis observational, prospective, cross-sectional study included 51 participants, of which 34 critically ill sepsis patients were recruited from intensive care units of a university hospital. Seventeen healthy volunteers served as controls. All participants underwent sublingual videomicroscopy by sidestream darkfield imaging. A new developed version of the Glycocheck™ software was used to quantify vascular density, perfused boundary region (PBR-an inverse variable of endothelial glycocalyx dimensions), red blood cell (RBC) velocity, RBC content, and blood flow in sublingual microvessels with diameters between 4 and 25 µm.ResultsA detailed analysis of adjacent diameter classes (1 µm each) of vessels between 4 and 25 µm revealed a severe reduction of vascular density in very small capillaries (5–7 µm), which correlated with markers of sepsis severity. Analysis of RBC velocity (VRBC) revealed a strong dependency between capillary and feed vessel VRBC in sepsis patients (R2 = 0.63, p < 0.0001) but not in healthy controls (R2 = 0.04, p = 0.43), indicating impaired capillary (de-)recruitment in sepsis. This finding enabled the calculation of capillary recruitment and dynamic capillary blood volume (CBVdynamic). Moreover, adjustment of PBR to feed vessel VRBC further improved discrimination between sepsis patients and controls by about 50%. By combining these dynamic microvascular and glycocalyx variables, we developed the microvascular health score (MVHSdynamic™), which decreased from 7.4 [4.6–8.7] in controls to 1.8 [1.4–2.7] in sepsis patients (p < 0.0001) and correlated with sepsis severity.ConclusionWe introduce new important diameter-specific quantification and differentiated analysis of RBC kinetics, a key to understand microvascular dysfunction in sepsis. MVHSdynamic, which has a broad bandwidth to detect microvascular (dys-) function, might serve as a valuable tool to detect microvascular impairment in critically ill patients.

Highlights

  • The availability of handheld, noninvasive sublingual video-microscopes allows for visualization of the microcirculation in critically ill patients

  • Derivation of an red blood cell (RBC) velocity‐adjusted perfused boundary region We have previously shown that PBR values increase in sepsis patients [18,19,20], indicating sepsis-induced damage of the endothelial glycocalyx (eGC)

  • Development of the Microvascular Health Score We have previously shown, that glycocalyx damage and microcirculatory impairment do neither coincide, nor do they occur in proportion in every sepsis patient [20]

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Summary

Introduction

The availability of handheld, noninvasive sublingual video-microscopes allows for visualization of the microcirculation in critically ill patients. Alterations of microvascular perfusion caused by endothelial cell dysfunction, glycocalyx degradation, increased leukocyte adhesion, microthrombus formation, and regional redistribution of blood flow contribute to organ failure in critically ill patients [1,2,3]. Several visual scoring systems and specialized (semi-) automated analysis tools have been developed to shorten time-to-result and improve accuracy [14,15,16,17]. Common to all these approaches is the (automated) selection and pooled analysis of microvessels with a diameter < 20 (rarely < 10) μm. An improved spatiotemporal resolution within this < 20 μm range is desirable to further dissect and understand functional microvascular alterations in sepsis and critical illness

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